Nuclear-powered
container carrier Sevmorput at port in Murmansk. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Russian, Chinese ships spotlighted by
Finnish police after pipeline damage, are now pairing up outside northern
Norway
The Sevmorput and Newnew Polar Bear
sailed over the Balticconnector and the telecom cable in pair at the time the
damage occurred. Now, they are following each other outside northern Norway, en
route to Asia via the northern coast of Siberia.
Read in Russian | Читать по-русски
By
Thomas Nilsen
October 18,
2023
Finland’s National Bureau of Investigation said in a statement on Tuesday it had
launched an investigation on specific vessels that sailed in the area during
the gas pipeline incident on October 7.
Two ships are mentioned by
name; the Russian Rosatomflot-operated Sevmorput and
the Chinese container carrier Newnew
Polar Bear.
“The vessels in the area at
the time of the incident have been established from open sources. Investigation
measures have been focused on several vessels, such as Newnew Polarbear and Sevmorput, but also on others which
according to data have been in the area at the time of the damage,” states
Detective Superintendent Risto Lohi from the National Bureau of
Investigation.
“In addition to the movements
of the ships, their backgrounds and previous activities are investigated, in
cooperation with the authorities of other states,” Lohi added.
A playback of shipping data
for October 7 is shown in the tweet below.
The two ships were then heading towards St. Petersburg. On the 11 and 13 of
October, they departed on a return voyage heading north towards the Europe-Asia
shortcut via the Arctic.
By Wednesday morning, the Sevmorput and Newnew Polar Bear are crossing
the Arctic Circle outside northern Norway. The Chinese vessel is a few hours
behind the Russian.
Norway
monitors
“We can’t go into detail about
the two vessels,” says Corporal Jonny Karlsen, spokesperson with the
Norwegian Joint Headquarters when asked by the Barents Observer about
measures taken to monitor the current movements along the coast of Norway,
waters that are packed with subsea pipelines and data cables.
He adds that the Norwegian
Armed Forces together with the police raised alert readiness in late 2022.
As previously reported by the Barents Observer, the Sevmorput is sailing a
subsidized voyage aimed at boosting cargo traffic between Russia’s Far Eastern
regions and St. Petersburg.
The nuclear-powered ship is
well-known in the Arctic and is frequently used by the Northern Fleet and other
military structures to bring arms stuff to Arctic bases and test
sites.
Hong Kong is destination for
the Newnew Polar Bear, according to the
vessel’s permit to sail north of Russia
issued by Rosatom’s Northern Sea Route Administration. The permit, valid until
October 31, allows the vessel to sail with icebreaker assistance, and the Sevmorput is likely the
icebreaker in question on this voyage.
According to Reuters, authorities responsible for
Sevmorput denied that one of its ships had been involved in the damage of the
subsea communication cable or pipeline between Finland and Estonia.
“High priority”
Jonny Karlsen says protection
of oil and gas installations in the North Sea has high priority.
“The presence and patrolling
of the armed forces make it harder to carry out covert sabotage actions against
the shelf.”
Although Norway doesn’t see
any direct threats, awareness is high.
“[Norway’s] Defense
forces reprioritise part of its activities, especially to maritime
surveillance, with increased operative availability on navy ships and the air force,”
Karlsen says.
He underlines that some of the
operations can’t be disclosed to the public.
“We make several measures and
adjustments that are not visible, or that we can tell about.”
NATO awareness
Also the other Nordic
countries and NATO have in recent years highlighted the danger of Russian
hybrid operations, like damage to subsea data cables and pipelines. The fear
got renewed attention after the Nord Stream gas pipelines were damaged near
Bornholm in the Baltic Sea in September last year.
In an interview with the Barents Observer, Deputy Commander at NATO’s
JFC Norfolk, Rear Admiral Tim Henry, assured that NATO has a good situation
awareness to protect subsea cables.
“Do I have the means to
protect them? Of course, we have the means. The answer is yes. As a military
person, yes. Making it impossible for anyone to operate without us knowing it,
and understanding what they are doing. We have a good understanding of what is
going on in our area of responsibility, yes,” Henry said.
Following the sabotage of the
Nord Stream pipeline, NATO created a center at its headquarters in
Brussels to protect critical undersea infrastructure. Norway, in cooperation
with other allies, deployed extra navy resources to the North Sea region where
a web of gas pipelines connects offshore installations with processing plants
in Norway, and Great Britain and pumps natural gas to continental Europe.
Swedish alarm
On Tuesday, it also became
clear that a telecom cable on the seabed between Sweden and Estonia was damaged
about the same time as the damage to the pipeline from Finland to Estonia
happened.
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